Ohio State eyes role as disrupter vs. No. 20 Michigan

Even casual fans know that records don’t matter when Ohio State and Michigan play, in any sport.Mere months ago, the unranked Michigan football team, a three-touchdown underdog, stunned the Buckeyes in Columbus, Ohio. The Buckeyes then ran off four straight victories, all by double-digit margins, to clinch the College Football Playoff title.It will be a role reversal on the basketball court Sunday in Columbus when unranked Ohio State (15-10, 7-7 Big Ten) tries to derail the surprising conference title hopes of No. 20 Michigan (19-5, 11-2).”I don’t believe in minimizing that game and this rivalry,” Ohio State coach Jake Diebler said. “We’ll certainly talk, and there’s even an educational component to this game to make sure our guys understand the history of this game.”There’s no minimizing it. There’s more to it, certainly in this time of the year and all of that, but make no mistake. This is a rivalry game, and we’ll embrace everything that comes with that.”The Wolverines moved atop the conference standings on Tuesday with their fifth straight win, a 75-73 conquest of No. 7 Purdue as first-year coach Dusty May tries to accomplish a worst-to-first scenario. Michigan was last in the conference last season (8-24, 3-17 Big Ten) under Juwan Howard.”We’ve got some tough games in front of us,” May said. “But this is exciting to be in mid-February playing extremely meaningful games, competing for a championship with programs, coaches, and players that are at the top of college basketball.”He and Michigan junior guard Roddy Gayle Jr. are subplots to make the rivalry even spicier. May was rumored to be a top candidate for the Ohio State job after Chris Holtmann was fired in February 2024 and Diebler took over as the interim coach.When Diebler led the Buckeyes to a 6-2 record, including the Big Ten tournament, he was named permanent coach on March 17. About a week later, May left Florida Atlantic for Michigan.